Thymic
carcinomas have a greater propensity to capsular invasion and metastases than
thymomas. Patients more often present with advanced disease and have a 5-year
survival rate of 30% to 50%.[1] Owing to the paucity of cases, optimal
management of thymic carcinoma has yet to be defined. As with thymoma, in most
published series, carefully selected patients with clearly resectable,
well-defined disease, have received complete surgical extirpation. For
clinically borderline or frankly unresectable lesions, induction chemotherapy,
thoracic radiation therapy, or both, have been used.
In
most published studies, surgery has been followed by adjuvant radiation
therapy. A prescriptive dose range has yet to be identified; most studies use
40 Gy to 70 Gy with standard fractionation scheme (1.8 Gy–2.0 Gy/fraction).
In
the largest series reported to date, data was obtained from 1,320 Japanese
patients.[2] The Masaoka clinical stage was found to
correlate well with prognosis of thymoma and thymic carcinoma. Patients with
thymic carinoma were treated with radiation therapy or chemotherapy. For
patients with thymic carcinoma, the 5-year survival rates were 67% for patients
treated with total resection, 30% for patients treated with subtotal resection,
and 24% for patients whose disease was inoperable. Adjuvant therapy including
radiation or chemotherapy did not appear to improve the prognosis in patients
with thymic carcinoma.[2]
A
multi-institutional retrospective outcome analysis of 186 patients with thymic
carcinoma has been reported.[2] This study failed to detect a long-term
survival benefit in patients treated with subtotal resection nor any
statistically significant survival augmentation from the addition of adjuvant
radiation to surgical resection. The authors stipulated that no definitive
conclusions could be made regarding the role of adjuvant radiation therapy in
thymic carcinoma as a result of sample size limitations.
The
5-year survival rates for patients with totally resected thymic carcinoma were
81.5% for patients treated with chemotherapy; 46.6% for patients treated with
radiation chemotherapy; 73.6% for patients treated with radiation therapy
alone; and, 72.2% for patients who received no adjuvant treatment.[2]
The
results from this study call into question conventional thinking regarding the
efficacy of an aggressive multimodality approach including debulking, radiation
therapy, and cisplatin-based chemotherapy.[3-5] While other studies support the addition of
adjuvant radiation and chemotherapy, optimum treatment regimens are
undetermined.
Chemotherapy
is also utilized in the management of patients with inoperable thymic
carcinoma. Most regimens used are similar to those used to treat thymoma and
include cisplatin.[6-10]
Objective
responses and improved outcomes compared to historical data have been reported
from small uncontrolled studies. Combinations of doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide,
and vincristine and cisplatin have also shown favorable responses in studies.[6-8] Etoposide, ifosfamide, and cisplatin (VIP)
was utilized in a prospective North American Intergroup trial.[9] There was a 25% (2 of 8 patients) partial
response rate. The 1-year and 2-year survival rates were 75% and 50%,
respectively.
Standard
treatment options for patients with operable disease include the following:
1.
En
bloc surgical resection.
2.
Postoperative
radiation therapy may be considered whether or not the surgical resection has
been complete, and especially for stage III and stage IVA patients.
Standard
treatment options for patients with inoperable disease (stage III and stage IV
with vena caval obstruction, pleural involvement, pericardial implants, etc.)
include the following:
1.
Radiation
therapy.
2.
Chemotherapy
with or without surgery and/or radiation therapy.
3.
Chemoradiation
therapy.
4.
Chemotherapy.
Treatment
options under clinical evaluation:
Areas
of active clinical evaluation for patients with thymic carcinoma include the
following:
·
New
drug regimens.
·
Variation
of drug doses in current regimens.
·
New
radiation therapy schedules.
Current Clinical Trials
Check for U.S. clinical trials from NCI's list
of cancer clinical trials that are now accepting patients withthymic carcinoma. The list of clinical trials
can be further narrowed by location, drug, intervention, and other criteria.
General information about clinical trials is
also available from the NCI
Web site.
References
1.
Eng
TY, Fuller CD, Jagirdar J, et al.: Thymic carcinoma: state of the art review.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 59 (3): 654-64, 2004. [PUBMED Abstract]
2.
Kondo
K, Monden Y: Therapy for thymic epithelial tumors: a clinical study of 1,320
patients from Japan. Ann Thorac Surg 76 (3): 878-84; discussion 884-5,
2003. [PUBMED Abstract]
3.
Ogawa
K, Toita T, Uno T, et al.: Treatment and prognosis of thymic carcinoma: a
retrospective analysis of 40 cases. Cancer 94 (12): 3115-9, 2002. [PUBMED Abstract]
4.
Greene
MA, Malias MA: Aggressive multimodality treatment of invasive thymic carcinoma.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 125 (2): 434-6, 2003. [PUBMED Abstract]
5.
Lucchi
M, Mussi A, Ambrogi M, et al.: Thymic carcinoma: a report of 13 cases. Eur J
Surg Oncol 27 (7): 636-40, 2001. [PUBMED Abstract]
6.
Koizumi
T, Takabayashi Y, Yamagishi S, et al.: Chemotherapy for advanced thymic
carcinoma: clinical response to cisplatin, doxorubicin, vincristine, and
cyclophosphamide (ADOC chemotherapy). Am J Clin Oncol 25 (3): 266-8,
2002. [PUBMED Abstract]
7.
Weide
LG, Ulbright TM, Loehrer PJ Sr, et al.: Thymic carcinoma. A distinct clinical
entity responsive to chemotherapy. Cancer 71 (4): 1219-23, 1993. [PUBMED Abstract]
8.
Carlson
RW, Dorfman RF, Sikic BI: Successful treatment of metastatic thymic carcinoma
with cisplatin, vinblastine, bleomycin, and etoposide chemotherapy. Cancer 66
(10): 2092-4, 1990. [PUBMED Abstract]
9.
Loehrer
PJ Sr, Jiroutek M, Aisner S, et al.: Combined etoposide, ifosfamide, and
cisplatin in the treatment of patients with advanced thymoma and thymic
carcinoma: an intergroup trial. Cancer 91 (11): 2010-5, 2001. [PUBMED Abstract]
10.
Igawa
S, Murakami H, Takahashi T, et al.: Efficacy of chemotherapy with carboplatin
and paclitaxel for unresectable thymic carcinoma. Lung Cancer 67 (2): 194-7,
2010. [PUBMED Abstract]
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